Posted on: February 17, 2006 Posted by: wolffkurt Comments: 0

Almost Anniversary

Now get this Nearly a year has gone by and I still haven’t figured out how to post a damn song via Comcast. Lazy bum.

Posted on: September 23, 2005 Posted by: wolffkurt Comments: 1

LHI unveiled

My first post with a photo, trying to see how it looks. Lee Hazlewood, announcing the debut of his new label, LHI (Lee Hazlewood Industries).

Posted on: September 23, 2005 Posted by: wolffkurt Comments: 0

Dolly Parton

Is playing at the San Francisco Bluegrass Festival next weekend. It’s not really a “bluegrass” festival, but there is *some* bluegrass involved–just most of the music is basically country and/or old time folk. Not that I’m complaining. The festival is free, the music’s GREAT, and extremely well organized.

Posted on: May 6, 2005 Posted by: wolffkurt Comments: 0

Charlie Poole

This guy’s story is pretty wild. He was a Southern singer, regional appeal, who wound up with quite the reputation as a boozer and ladies man, but also a top-notch musician and front man. And quite the charmer, or so they say. He cut at least several dozen songs (I don’t know how many), and believe it or not, Sony (which owns Columbia, for whom Poole recorded in the 1920s)…

ted daffan 78 record baby you can't get me down
Posted on: February 27, 2005 Posted by: wolffkurt Comments: 0

More information on Ted Daffan

Check out Ted Daffan’s bio from the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Or if you’re curious where he’s buried (he died in ’96), this little site will tell ya. Ted also ran a record label, Daffan Records, where he cut sites on artists like Jerry Irby and Floyd Tillman starting in 1955.

ted daffan 78 bluest blues
Posted on: February 27, 2005 Posted by: wolffkurt Comments: 0

Heading Down the Wrong Highway

Ted Daffan recorded that song in the 1940s – Ted’s a sadly overlooked country artist, an original honky tonker. He wrote “Born to Lose,” an absolute classic that’s since become one of the genre’s defining songs. Ray Charles took the song to new heights on his landmark Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music. But Daffan’s original has its own charm. Hear it below.